When Mikel Arteta named “man-to-man” as the biggest issue in Premier League set-piece defending, he did not just offer a tactical soundbite. He undercut the very narrative that had turned Arsenal into the league’s set-piece villains. For weeks, pundits and rival managers had framed the debate around systems, zonal marking, and dark arts. Arteta’s admission reframes it: the problem is individual execution, not design.
Arteta’s “Man-to-Man” Quote Reframes the Set-Piece Narrative
In March 2026, CBS Sports reported Arteta’s response to the ongoing criticism of Arsenal’s set-piece dominance. The Arsenal manager stated that the “biggest issue” in defending dead balls was man-to-man marking. That single line contradicts the earlier media and rival-manager framing that had focused on zonal schemes, blocking tactics, and time-wasting at corners. According to The Guardian, Brighton manager Fabian Hurzeler had accused Arsenal of spending “over one minute” on set-piece preparation, while Everton’s David Moyes had labelled Arsenal “trailblazers for the use of dark arts” in grappling and blocking. Arteta’s shift to man-to-man as the core issue moves the conversation from systemic or zonal failure to individual defensive execution.
Reuters reported in early March 2026 that Arteta had shrugged off criticism of Arsenal’s set-piece mastery, with the club having scored 21 goals from set pieces in the 2025-26 season and 16 from corners alone, equalling the Premier League single-season record. The narrative in the press had been that Arsenal were winning ugly and that set-piece reliance was diminishing the spectacle. Arteta did not deny the reliance; he reframed the cause. If the biggest issue is man-to-man defending, then the fix is not to redesign set-piece schemes but to improve how defenders track and challenge their markers. That puts the onus on execution, not on outlawing or redesigning Arsenal’s routines.
BBC Sport and ESPN both reported Arteta saying he was “upset” that Arsenal did not score more from corners, and that he viewed set-piece excellence as a legitimate tactical evolution. The Times reported that Arteta had argued there would not be more open-play goals unless rules or widespread tactics changed, and that man-to-man defending in open play was forcing teams to rely more on dead balls. By naming man-to-man as the “biggest issue,” Arteta was therefore aligning the set-piece debate with his broader point: the game has evolved, and the real lever for change is how teams defend in open play and at set pieces, not whether Arsenal’s routines are “ugly” or time-wasting.
Critics Wanted a System Story; Arteta Gave Them an Execution Story
Pundit Chris Sutton had claimed that Arsenal would be the “ugliest” Premier League champions if they won the title, and Liverpool manager Arne Slot said he no longer enjoyed watching some Premier League matches because of the prevalence of set-piece tactics. According to The Guardian and BBC Sport, Arteta dismissed that framing. He said he did not know how you “celebrate one goal different to another one” and argued that Manchester City, Chelsea, and Manchester United also relied heavily on set pieces. The narrative had been that Arsenal were uniquely cynical or that the league needed to act on time-wasting and blocking. Arteta’s man-to-man comment refocused the debate: if defenders are losing their men, the failure is not the attacking team’s design but the defending team’s execution. That leaves the “ugly champions” line looking like a value judgment about aesthetics, while Arteta’s point is about cause and effect.
Arsenal’s 2-1 win over Chelsea in March 2026 was decided by set pieces, with all three goals coming from dead-ball situations. Arteta’s post-match comments, reported by CBS Sports and others, tied that success to the broader tactical picture. His insistence that the “biggest issue” is man-to-man defending implies that opponents could reduce Arsenal’s set-piece impact by improving individual marking and concentration, rather than by lobbying for new rules or criticising Arsenal’s routines. The admission undercuts the set-piece narrative because it shifts the lever from system to execution.
What This Actually Means
The takeaway is that the mainstream set-piece narrative was focusing on the wrong variable. If the biggest issue is man-to-man, then criticism of Arsenal’s design, timing, or “dark arts” misses the mark. The story is not that Arsenal have found a cynical loophole; it is that defensive execution, not scheme, is the primary failure when goals are conceded from set pieces. Arteta’s admission gives cover to his own team’s approach while shifting the debate toward individual responsibility. Review will still question whether set-piece-heavy football is good for the spectacle, but the manager has successfully reframed the cause from system to execution.
Who Is Mikel Arteta?
Mikel Arteta is the head coach of Arsenal, appointed in December 2019. He previously worked as an assistant to Pep Guardiola at Manchester City and played for Arsenal and Everton in the Premier League. Under his management, Arsenal have become the Premier League’s most effective set-piece team in the 2025-26 season.
- Arteta took over at Arsenal midway through the 2019-20 season and won the FA Cup that year; the club have since finished second twice and led the 2025-26 title race by five points in March 2026.
- Set-piece coach Nicolas Jover joined from Manchester City in July 2021 and has overseen a run of 22 corner goals since the start of 2023-24, the most of any Premier League side.
- Arteta has repeatedly defended set-piece excellence as a legitimate tactical evolution and argued that without rule changes or a shift away from man-to-man defending, set-piece efficiency will remain central to the modern game.